Cover image for Lexical Change and Variation in the Southeastern United States, 1930-1990.
Lexical Change and Variation in the Southeastern United States, 1930-1990.
Title:
Lexical Change and Variation in the Southeastern United States, 1930-1990.
Author:
Johnson, Ellen.
ISBN:
9780817384500
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (336 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- List of Tables -- List of Maps -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1 Collection and Categorization of the Data -- The Linguistic Variables and the Interview -- The Social and Regional Variables -- 2 Variation -- Patterns of Variation -- Statistical Methods -- Special Topics -- 3 Change -- Statistical Methods -- Change and Variation -- Change in the Lexicon -- 4 Culture and the Lexicon -- The Lexicon as an Object of Study -- Cultural Change and Lexical Change -- Society and Language Variation -- Appendix 1: Biographical Sketches -- Appendix 2: Variants Associated with Regional or Social Groups -- Appendix 3: Variants Exhibiting Diachronic Change -- Appendix 4: Tallies and Selected Commentary -- Appendix 5: Index of Variants by Question Number -- References -- Index.
Abstract:
This book discusses words used in the Southeast and how they have changed during the 20th century. It also describes how the lexicon varies according to the speaker's age, race, education, sex, and place of residence (urban versus rural; coastal versus piedmont versus mountain). Data collected in the 1930s as part of the Linguistic Atlas of the Middle and South Atlantic States project were compared with data collected in 1990 from similar speakers in the same communities. The results show that region was the most important factor in differentiating dialects in the 1930s but that it is the least important element in the 1990s, with age, education, race, and age all showing about the same influence on the use of vocabulary. An appendix contains a tally of the responses given by 78 speakers to 150 questions about vocabulary items, along with speakers' commentary. Results from the 1930s may be compared to those from 1990, making this a treasure trove for anyone interested in regional terms or in how our speech is changing as the South moves from an agricultural economy through industrialization and into the information age.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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